Had a project the other day and the customer got a surprisingly good video.
Here is the situation, a ~100' shore pine that happens to be hanging over this well-pump house.
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The trunk went up about 40' at an angle, then took a super awkward jog towards and over the pump-house. On top of that, it was covered in the fruiting bodies of red ring rot fungus, which hollows out the core of what are already weak trees.
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The big picture. I thought about climbing that doug fir to it's right first and installing a climbing line in the top, but in the end decided it wasn't necessary. In case I felt the pine wasn't 100% safe to climb while I was spuring up it on the removal, I did have my grappling hook with me. That would allow me to toss into the fir, transfer into it, climb to the top and set a climb-line there if necessary to reduce my reliance on the less than ideal pine.
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On the way up. Steel-core flip-line, tree-squeeze and 200' line in my backpack set up DRT. These pines are like velcro and if you have a climb-line going to the ground, the limbs you are shedding WILL catch it and cause you problems. (DRT vs SRT on projects like this is a whole other discussion.....)
Mentioned in the 'tips and tricks' thread, but below are my hinged plywood covering the roof of the pump-house.
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Video:
The top had weight in the direction it needed to go (right in this photo) due to where the sun is here. That was very helpful, because at this point with the lean I was over and beyond the pump-house, and surrounded in the limbs of other trees. What I needed to do was send the top about 20'+ to my right, to 'jump' it over the building as well as clear the limbs that could cause it to roll back towards the building. Fir limb breakage was planned for and acceptable.
I made an extra deep, shallow face, extra deep side-cuts since these pines are super stringy, then sent the top with the handsaw to be as safe as possible during the swing. Once the face closed and the intentionally weak hinge broke, I pushed it towards the driveway as hard as possible for maximum distance. Yah, the tree felt like being on the end of a wet noodle at this point. The top was only 10-15', so I was at like 90' here. Even with minimal pull on the hinge-wood, it gave me a good swing.
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Gotta enjoy the view:
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Rather than bother rigging anything, I just did a 'cut-and-toss'. For the smaller wood I made bypass cuts and tossed the wood towards the driveway. For the bigger wood, I went shorter, cut straight through and pushed those towards the driveway. No cleanup for me, an excavator will come by and put everything into a dump truck.
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